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Association of achieved blood pressure after treatment for primary aldosteronism with long-term kidney function.

Tatsuya HazeYuichiro YanoYu HatanoKouichi TamuraIsao KuriharaHiroki KobayashiMika TsuikiTakamasa IchijoNorio WadaTakuyuki KatabamiKoichi YamamotoShintaro OkamuraTatsuya KaiShoichiro IzawaYuichiro YoshikawaMasanobu YamadaYoshiro ChibaAkiyo TanabeMitsuhide Narusenull null
Published in: Journal of human hypertension (2021)
Little is known regarding the association of blood pressure (BP) after treatment for primary aldosteronism (PA) (i.e., adrenalectomy and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists) with long-term renal outcomes, and whether the association is independent of BP before treatment. Using a dataset from a nationwide registry of PA in Japan, we assessed whether achieved BP levels 6 months after treatment for PA are associated with annual changes in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), rapid eGFR decline, and incident chronic kidney disease (CKD) during the 5-year follow-up period. The cohort included 1266 PA patients. In multivariable linear regression including systolic BP (SBP) levels before treatment for PA, estimates (95% confidence interval [CI]) for annual changes in eGFR after month 6 associated with one-standard deviation (1-SD) higher SBP at month 6 were -0.08 (-0.15, -0.02) mL/min/1.73 m2/year. After multivariable adjustment, the estimate (95% CI) for annual changes in eGFR after month 6 was -0.12 (-0.21, -0.02) for SBP ≥ 130 mmHg vs. SBP < 130 mmHg at month 6. Among 537 participants without CKD at baseline, a 1-SD higher SBP was associated with a higher risk for incident CKD events (hazard ratio [95% CI]: 1.40 [1.00, 1.94]). Higher SBP after treatment for PA was associated with a higher risk for kidney dysfunction over time, independently of BP levels before treatment. Achieving SBP lower than 130 mmHg after treatment for PA may be linked to better kidney outcomes.
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